Traditionally, amnesty was seen as the substance of peace and there was a presumption of the legitimacy of amnesty under international law. During the past two decades, some scholars and regional human rights courts have reached the opposite conclusion, claiming the existence of a prohibition against amnesty for gross human rights violations. In this view, a transitional amnesty – meant as a tool to allow a pacific post-war or post-dictatorship transition to democracy – would not be a legitimate option anymore. This article addresses the controversy concerning amnesty in international law and analyses both the motivations of those who support such a prohibition and the consequences on the concept of punitive power, the relationships between individual rights and law in general, and criminal law and democracy.
paolo caroli (2018). Behind The Rhetoric: The Implication of Prohibiting Amnesties. THE JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE LAW, 13(1), 95-106.
Behind The Rhetoric: The Implication of Prohibiting Amnesties
paolo caroli
2018
Abstract
Traditionally, amnesty was seen as the substance of peace and there was a presumption of the legitimacy of amnesty under international law. During the past two decades, some scholars and regional human rights courts have reached the opposite conclusion, claiming the existence of a prohibition against amnesty for gross human rights violations. In this view, a transitional amnesty – meant as a tool to allow a pacific post-war or post-dictatorship transition to democracy – would not be a legitimate option anymore. This article addresses the controversy concerning amnesty in international law and analyses both the motivations of those who support such a prohibition and the consequences on the concept of punitive power, the relationships between individual rights and law in general, and criminal law and democracy.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.